RMU goalie goes for gold - Robert Morris University

Transcription

RMU goalie goes for gold - Robert Morris University
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Foundations
ROBERT
MORRIS
UNIVERSITY
MAGAZINE
>
WINTER
2010
Brianne McLaughlin
Goalie | Robert Morris University
Hometown Sheffield Village, Ohio
Birthday June 20, 1987
YEAR
GAMES
SHOTS
SAVES
GOALS
SV%
GAA
Freshman
31
1,206
1,088
118
.902
4.0
Sophomore
27
910
826
84
.908
3.29
Junior
32
1,014
926
88
.913
2.82
Senior
30
1,058
969
89
.916
3.14
120
4,188
3,809
379
.910
3.31
CAREER
Thanks to an illustrious career with the Colonials in
which she stopped an NCAA Division I record 3,809
shots, Brianne was selected for the U.S. Olympic Team.
The team meets its first opponent, China, at 3 p.m. on
Sunday, February 14.
RMU goalie
goes for gold
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FALL/09
10
Foundations
DEPARTMENTS
02 < CAMPUS REPORT
DEAR ALUMNI AND FRIENDS,
As you’ll learn in this issue of Foundations, I’ve become an evangelist for international educational
experiences, encouraging students to study abroad and pushing RMU to offer multiple international
opportunities. The reason: Students who graduate without international experiences will find themselves at a
disadvantage in the workplace, especially as their careers advance. The G-20 Summit held in September in
Pittsburgh reminded us that we compete in a global marketplace, and we will not succeed unless our workers
have the tools to thrive in this increasingly complex and diverse environment.
Last year IBM conducted the third edition of its biennial “Global CEO Study” series, which looks at the
enterprise of the future. The research was based on surveys of more than 1,100 CEOs and public sector and
business leaders from around the world. The question the study sought to answer was “What will the
enterprise of the future look like?” It examined the differences between the responses of financial
outperformers and those of underperformers. The results indicated that the successful enterprise of the future
will have five major characteristics:
HUNGRY FOR CHANGE. The enterprise of the future is capable of changing quickly and successfully.
Instead of merely responding to changes, it shapes and leads them.
INNOVATIVE BEYOND CUSTOMER IMAGINATION. The enterprise of the future surpasses the expectations of
increasingly demanding customers. Deep collaborative relationships allow it to surprise customers with
innovations that make both them and it more successful.
GLOBALLY INTEGRATED. The enterprise of the future is integrating to take advantage of today’s global
economy. Its business is strategically designed to access the best capabilities, knowledge, and assets
from wherever they reside in the world and apply them wherever required in the world.
DISRUPTIVE BY NATURE. The enterprise of the future radically challenges its business model, disrupting
the basis of competition. It shifts the value proposition, overturns traditional delivery approaches,
and as soon as opportunities arise, reinvents itself and its entire industry.
GENUINE, NOT JUST GENEROUS. The enterprise of the future goes beyond philanthropy and compliance
and reflects genuine concern for society in all actions and decisions.
So what does all of this mean for Robert Morris University? It serves as a roadmap for the type of education
and experiences we need to provide our students, who are the workers and leaders in the enterprises of the
future. They need to be able to understand different cultures and interact with people of diverse backgrounds.
They must have a strong sense of ethics and social responsibility. They must be innovative and comfortable
with technology and its applications. They must be great communicators, risk takers, and entrepreneurs.
And most of all, they must not be afraid to fail.
This is how we approach our educational mission at RMU, regardless of what a student studies,
because we feel this applies to everyone and in every career—especially in our increasingly complex
and competitive world.
Sincerely,
G R E G O R Y G . D E L L’ O M O , P H . D .
PRESIDENT
> 08 SCOREBOARD
24 < UP CLOSE & PERSONAL
> 26 CLASS NOTE S
33 < UPCOMING EVENTS
CREDITS
EDITOR
Mark Houser
CONTRIBUTORS
Valentine J. Brkich, Aubrey DiVito ‘08,
James Duzyk M’00, Mitch Kramer '08,
Jennifer Gill Kissel, Bonnie Pfister
ART DIRECTOR/DESIGNER
Amy Joy
PHOTOGRAPHY/ILLUSTRATIONS
Front Cover: Joe Appel
Other Photos: Paul Bereswill, Terry Clark,
Jason Cohn, Mark Houser, Mitch Kramer '08,
USA Hockey/Bruce Kluckhohn
PRINTING
RR Donnelley Hoechstetter Plant
Going Global . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12
A record number of our students studied abroad last year. Read
their stories, and learn about how RMU brought two Italian
students here after an earthquake destroyed their university.
Jefferson Rejuvenated . . . . . . 16
It was once the center of campus life, but Jefferson Center needed
some TLC. Now it has a new 24/7 computer lab, an office for
veterans studying here, and a new lease on life.
FOUNDATIONS ONLINE
Douglas A. Derda
Foundations (ISSN 1934-5690) is published three
times a year by the Office of Public Relations
and Marketing in conjunction with the Office of
Institutional Advancement and mailed free of
charge to alumni, donors, trustees, faculty, staff
and friends of Robert Morris University. The
opinions expressed in the magazine do not
necessarily reflect the official policies of
Robert Morris University.
Contributions to Class Notes and address
changes may be sent to:
Office of Alumni Relations
Robert Morris University
6001 University Boulevard
Moon Township, PA 15108-1189
Phone: (412) 397-2586
Fax: (412) 397-2142
E-mail: [email protected]
It is the policy of Robert Morris University to provide
equal opportunity in all educational programs and
activities, admission of students and conditions of
employment for all qualified individuals regardless
of race, color, sex, religion, age, disability, national
origin and/or sexual preference.
Simulations for Success . . . . 18
Nursing students have more than textbooks to prepare them for their
careers. A new simulation lab is so good, hospitals are asking about
using it to teach staff. And bigger plans are in the works.
Acting Well . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 22
Ethics and business—at RMU, they are not mutually exclusive.
More than a Number . . . . . . 23
Tops in the investment world, this alumna knows what
her degree is worth.
10 Questions . . . . . . . . . . . 32
Dean of Engaged Learning Shari Payne talks about the
value of experiences outside the classroom, playing the flute,
and what ice cream flavor RMU is.
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“I AM
ONE DRIVEN AMERICAN”
> The Thinker
It’s been a busy year for Monica Marie VanDieren,
Ph.D., but the math professor and codirector of the
University Honors Program isn’t bothered by work.
She even has rearranged the letters of her name into
a slogan: “I am one driven American.”
Just before fall semester started, VanDieren flew to
Poland to speak on theoretical concepts of infinity
at a European Science Foundation research conference.
In November, VanDieren gave a talk on encouraging
children’s mathematical creativity at Leadership Pittsburgh’s
TEDx conference. That was after getting back from
Washington, D.C., where she represented RMU at
the National Collegiate Honors Council’s annual
conference. Presumably she got some work done on
the plane for the council’s small college standing
committee, to which she was just appointed.
Then last month, VanDieren was keynote speaker at
the “Girls' Night Out” event at Canonsburg Middle
School. The event promotes healthy lifestyles, positive
self-image, and empowerment of female students.
With a track record like that, it’s no surprise the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
published a glowing profile of VanDieren this summer in its “The Thinkers” series.
But we do hope she got a moment’s rest over the holidays.
> Equal Access to All
RMU has formed a new organization, the Council on Institutional Equity, chaired
by Rex L. Crawley, Ph.D., and including both student and faculty members. The
council’s role is ensuring that all members of the campus community have equal access
to the university’s programs and services. Crawley, assistant dean of the School of
Communications and Information Systems, was recently named a “Man of
Excellence” in the education field by New Pittsburgh Courier.
2 • R M U . E D U / F O U N D AT I O N S
> Hail to the Chief
When Barack Obama came to Pittsburgh to speak at the AFL-CIO convention
in September, senior Tyler Punteteri not only met the president backstage,
he even got to drive in the motorcade.
Thanks to an uncle who is active in Democratic politics, the finance major
from Wampum drove a limo ferrying White House press corps from the
airport. Punteteri shook the president's hand, though he admits he was too
nervous to strike up much of a conversation with the commander-in-chief.
"I didn't know what to say to him. I was just so excited," Punteteri
said. It didn’t get any easier; at the same function, he also got to
meet Mario Lemieux.
> Global Greening
Sustainablility, a key issue at last month’s climate summit in Copenhagen,
is also the main concern for students of management professor Marcel
Minutolo, MBA, in a classroom exercise that involves real-world
business experience.
Minutolo’s students have been paired with Steward Earth LLC, a
sustainablility consulting firm based in McKean, Pa., through a studentbusiness matchmaker program run by the Global Reporting Initiative.
The UN-backed agency in Amsterdam sets standards for measuring
and reporting environmental sustainablility for companies
and organizations.
Through the matchmaker program, Minutolo’s students get to
participate in the writing of a business sustainablility report, while
Steward Earth gets some extra eyes and minds checking on its work.
THE COUNTRY, RMU HAS THE HIGHEST AVERAGE GRADES... VISIT FOUNDATIONS ONLINE FOR STATS.
CAMPUS REPORT
> AMONG ALL NCAA DIVISION I SOFTBALL TEAMS IN
> Honor Roll
Science students working with
faculty members Maria
Kalevitch, Ph.D., Paul
Badger, Ph.D., and
William Dress, Ph.D.,
recently presented the
results of their summer soil
research projects at the Annual Meeting
of the Soil Science Society of America
held in Pittsburgh.
Students in a directed study course on
leadership in public relations designed by
communications professor Ann Jabro,
Ph.D., attended the Public Relations
Student Society of America conference in
San Diego in November. Jabro 's paper,
"Event Planning: A Transformative
Learning Experience Linking Theory to
Practice," was presented at the society’s
Educators Academy Division.
Rebecca Tokarsky, an environmental
science major, was named the president
of the RMU chapter of National Science
Teachers Association. The newest student
group in the School of Engineering, Math
and Science plans to be presenting at the
association’s annual conference in
Philadelphia in March.
recycle this magazine
Give it to a neighbor who’s in high school
and help spread the word about RMU.
R O B E R T M O R R I S U N I V E R S I T Y F O U N D AT I O N S • 3
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After spending so much time thinking
about fires, floods, and mortality, students
of actuarial sciences must want something
less disturbing to read between classes.
That’s where Michael Pacolay comes in.
A senior in the university’s highly
acclaimed actuarial
sciences program
and an intern for
Highmark,
Pacolay was
one of two
students
selected
nationally last
year to the editorial
board of The Future
Actuary. The newsletter is published
jointly by Society of Actuaries and the
Casualty Actuarial Society and is read by
those preparing for careers in the field.
Pacolay’s first article, which reviewed job
interview tips from actuarial managers,
was published in the fall.
Pacolay, a West Mifflin native, practices
kung fu. So when he’s “hitting the tables,”
we are not sure if that means the actuarial
kind, or more solid ones.
> SEE THIS MAGAZINE AND EXTRA FEATURES AT RMU.EDU/FOUNDATIONS
> Love,
Actuarially
Page 8
> On the Big Screen
The latest film by the university’s Center for Documentary Production, “What
Does Trouble Mean? Nate Smith’s Revolution,” premiered in October to a
packed theater at the new August Wilson Center for African American
Culture in downtown Pittsburgh.
> Focus on the Arts
Jon Radermacher, MFA, interim head of the media arts department in
the School of Communications and Information Systems, is among 31
international artists whose work — salt and pepper shakers (above) from
his “Consumption” series — is being shown in "Paper or Plastic?"
The exhibition at the Luke & Eloy Gallery in Lawrenceville runs
through Jan. 16.
Media arts professor Hyla Willis, MFA, traveled to Spain's Basque country
in the fall to participate in Soft Power, a program about art and the politics
of biotechnology. Willis went with subRosa, a feminist art collective she
is part of.
Media arts professor Carolina Loyola-Garcia, MFA, participated in
“Transfer Lounge,” an exhibition featuring Spanish and American artists
in the Space Gallery in downtown Pittsburgh in the fall.
For his body of work as a writer, English professor John Lawson, Ph.D.,
was honored by St. Andrews Presbyterian College with its Ethel N. Fortner
Award in the fall. Lawson once taught creative writing at the Laurinsburg,
N.C., college, and St. Andrews College Press published Lawson’s first
collection of poetry, Generations, in 2007.
> Movers & Shakers
Maria V. Kalevitch, interim dean of the
School of Engineering, Mathematics and
Science, served as evaluator on a National
Science Foundation panel in Washington
D.C. in November, where she reviewed
proposals submitted to the NSF Scholarships
in Science, Technology, Engineering, and
Mathematics (S-STEM) program.
4 • R M U . E D U / F O U N D AT I O N S
"The Doctor Is In,"
a Moon Community
Access TV program
co-hosted by computer
and information systems
professor Robert Skovira,
Ph.D., and Coraopolis physician Marc
Schneiderman, has received its second
consecutive national Communicator Award.
Connie Serapiglia ’99 M’01 D’05, director of
information technology customer services,
presented her paper, "Factors Affecting
Women's Decisions to Pursue an IS Degree:
A Case Study," at the Information Systems
Educator Conference in Washington, D.C.,
in November.
With archival footage, interviews, and
dramatic reenactments, the 56-minute film
tells how an African American crane
operator evolved into the charismatic
leader who forced integration
of Pittsburgh’s
construction
trade unions
in the 1970s.
The film was
written and
produced by
Erica Peiffer ‘05
and Alexander Wilson ’05 M’07
and edited by Brad Grimm ‘07.
Valentine J. Brkich, senior writer for
public relations and marketing, recently
published Bridgewater:
A Narrative History of
a Pennsylvania River
Town. In the book,
Brkich shares tales of his
family’s history in the
town, as he touches on
the meaning of place in one’s life. More
about the book is at Foundations Online.
> Official
Business
Academic Media Center Director Michael DiLauro screened his awardwinning documentary, “Prisoners Among Us,” at the University of Miami
in September for the school’s motion picture program. DiLauro’s film,
about the emergence of the Italian-American identity during World War II,
won the Best Documentary Grand Jury Prize at the New York Independent
Film Festival in 2004.
> Preparing for the Worst
More than 100 students from the School of Nursing and Health Sciences
participated in a disaster drill at Pittsburgh International Airport in August.
Airport rescue units needed volunteers to play the roles of airline crash
victims so teams could practice their emergency response procedures.
RMU provided more volunteers than any other organization.
Science education professor Matthew
Maurer, Ph.D., and Lauralee Zelesnak, a
biology teacher at Mowhawk High School,
teamed up to discuss the university’s
“college in high school” program at a
regional conference of the National
Science Teachers Association in Fort
Lauderdale, Fla., in November.
> In Print
Donna Fetterman,
director of the Office of
Student Civic Engagement,
gave the invocation at the
140th Anniversary
Symposium of YWCA
of Greater Pittsburgh
in October.
Morgan O'Brien '82 M'85 joined the
university board of trustees this fall.
O’Brien is president and CEO of
Duquesne Light Holdings. His wife
is Kathleen Flavin
O’Brien ’81.
President
Gregory G.
Dell'Omo, Ph.D., has
been named to the Division I board
of directors of the National Collegiate
Athletic Association, as the representative
for the Northeast Conference. Dell’Omo is
also a member of the NCAA President’s
Advisory Group.
Paul Spradley ’03 M’06,
assistant director of
student life for multicultural
affairs, has been named to
the board of directors of
the Greater Pittsburgh
Literacy Council.
5
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> Conferences
> RMU Welcomes
the World
> Rock On
This shot by Justin Zuccarelli ‘08 of guitarist Fred Mascherino
playing at the 2008 Warped Tour won a Photo District
News/Billboard magazine Year in Music Moment
award in the crowd category.
> World Wise
“When I saw how much emphasis the president
places on global learning, I told myself that this is a
place where international education programs can get a
lot of support and many things can happen,” Mansourian
says of RMU.
Titi Adewale M'00, RMU's former director of international
student services and study abroad, has moved to Charlotte, N.C.
Associate Provost Lawrence Tomei, Ed.D., praised her service to
RMU: "Titi's leadership and personal commitment to international
exchange and study abroad has personified the RMU core value
of global perspective."
6 • R M U . E D U / F O U N D AT I O N S
The meeting was the second visit to RMU by a
delegation from the German Marshal Fund of the
United States. The Washington-based organization
arranges month-long transatlantic study fellowships for
Europeans and Americans selected as potential future leaders.
This year's group also included directors of nonprofit
organizations in Turkey and Romania, and the director
of a cultural center and museum in Slovakia.
Professors Daria Crawley, Ph.D., and Patrick Litzinger, Ph.D.,
gave presentations to the group, as did Dewitt Peart ‘81,
executive vice president for economic development at the
Allegheny Conference on Community Development. The fellows
also met with President Gregory G. Dell'Omo,
Ph.D., who explained the U.S. system of
higher education and his guiding
philosophy and strategy for RMU.
> Welcoming the World, Part 2
When throngs of foreign diplomats and media from around the world poured
into town in September for the G-20 Pittsburgh Summit, RMU stepped
forward to make them feel at home.
> Their Final is
in Hardcover
Students in the documentary photography
course taught by media arts professor Christine Holtz,
MFA, made something lasting out of their class project.
The book, Community, features the best photos by students
Samantha Cuddy, Stephen Inman, Ryan Matteo, Juliane
Sandora, Nicole Storey, and Cassandra Weinzierl. The
book is for sale online, and a link — with a preview of some
of the best shots — is available at Foundations Online.
Students from nine countries translated the script for a one-hour guided
walking tour of the downtown area into their native tongues. With the help
of Doug Derda, web/social media designer, the students and Mark Houser,
university editor and the tour’s writer, recorded the audio as downloadable
podcasts. The podcast tours were advertised in the G-20 media center and in
major hotels, and were downloaded more than 2,000 times that week.
VisitPittsburgh, the region’s tourism bureau, is working with RMU to link
to the downtown walking tour podcasts on its main Web page.
If you’d like to download the free MP3 walking tour of downtown Pittsburgh
in English, French, Turkish, Chinese, or six other languages, visit
rmu.edu/foundations.
TO DOWNLOAD THE WALKING TOUR
The university's new executive director of
international programs, Ida Mansourian, has
an impressive global track record. The Iranian
native has been to almost 40 countries, on every
continent except Antarctica, and speaks four
languages. Mansourian has been working on international
programs at Mesa Community College since 1996,
including the last five years as director of international
education. One of the country's biggest community
colleges, the Arizona institution sends about 150
students abroad each year, and enrolls some 2,000
international students from more than 100 countries.
> VISIT FOUNDATIONS ONLINE
Denmark's top evening news anchorman and
three other European professionals visited
campus in October to discuss the G-20
summit and American and European
politics with distinguished faculty and
an influential alumnus.
The annual Sport Management
Conference promises each year to bring
top sports executives to campus to offer
students career advice and networking
opportunities, and this November’s
program was no exception. Speakers
included former New York Giants
general manager Ernie Accorsi and
Murray Cohn ‘88, senior director of
team ticket sales for the NBA.
The Greater Pittsburgh
Nursing Research
Conference, held on
campus in October,
brought nearly 300
people including
clinical nurses, nurse
educators, and nursing students from
across the Pittsburgh region. This year's
focus was on evidence-based practice.
> Scholarships
The university’s chapter of Alpha Chi
National Honor Society inducted 69 new
members in the fall. Student members
are juniors and seniors who have
completed 60 credits, at least half at
RMU, and who carry an A-average
with a QPA of 3.7 or higher.
Brendan Methers, a sophomore studying
mechanical engineering, won a $2,000
Myrtle and Earl Walker Scholarship from
the Society of Manufacturing Engineers,
one of 143 scholarships awarded
nationwide this year by SME.
> > ARE YOU A FRIEND OF ROBERT?
Name: Robert Morris
Email: [email protected]
R O B E R T M O R R I S U N I V E R S I T Y F O U N D AT I O N S • 7
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> FOR THE LATEST SCORES VISIT RMUCOLONIALS.COM
SCOREB ARD
> RILEY
MEN > Despite a
painful 0-10-1
start, RMU
closed out the
season at 3-3-2—
with each of the last three losses by one
goal, including a double-overtime game—
and posted a 3-4-3 record in NEC games.
Senior midfielder Sean Riley had four
goals and four assists to lead RMU
offensively, and freshman goalie Toba
Bolaji posted a 0.91 goals-against
average and five shutouts in 12 starts.
WOMEN > The team tied school records
for both NEC and total victories,
finishing 4-5-1 in league play and 8-9-1
overall. Sophomore forward Ayana
Davis made All-NEC Second Team; she
finished fifth in the conference with nine
goals and sixth in points with 18, both
team bests. Freshman goalkeeper Jessica
Olin compiled a .795 save percentage
and finished with seven shutouts for
the year, a school record.
> FIELD
HOCKEY
Sophomore goaltender Stephanie Seeley
set an NCAA single-game record with 24
saves in a September match against Ohio.
It was a bright spot in a trying year in
which the team went 1-7 in the NEC
and 2-13 overall. Sophomore forward
Chantele Crow led the Colonials in
scoring with four goals and a pair
of assists.
8 • R M U . E D U / F O U N D AT I O N S
“ONE GAME AT A TIME, THEY TOOK IT UPON THEMSELVES TO IMPROVE.”
> SOCCER
> IMPRESSIVE FINISH
SPURS NCAA PLAYOFF
DREAMS
When junior kicker Garrett Clawson split the
uprights to give the Colonials a 13-10 last-second
win at Albany, the victory meant more than just
breaking the Great Danes’ long dominance
on their home field. It also meant more
than just helping Clawson tally a team
record 14 field goals. With that kick,
the Colonials got back to their
winning ways.
The team finished 2009 with five
straight victories, reversing a sixgame losing streak. Their 5-3
Northeast Conference record (5-6
overall) raises hopes the team can
contend for the NEC title next season, and
the automatic Football Championship Subdivision
playoff berth that will come with it.
> CLAWSON
“We certainly were up and down this season, but we finished
the way we were supposed to,” DiMichele said. “I can’t
wait for training camp. I realize that’s down the road
a little bit, and we’re going to work hard in the
offseason and in spring ball, but I can’t wait to put
the pads on again when it means something.”
> DIMICHELE
The 19th class of inductees, named at halftime of the Oct. 17 home football
game against Saint Francis, each left indelible marks in Colonials sports
history. Sam Dorsett (‘99-’03) still holds a school-record 3,847 yards rushing.
In basketball, Jarrett Durham (‘84-’96) coached the men to 3 NEC titles and
NCAA berths, Sheri Horvath (‘94-’97) is second all-time in field goals with
570, and Perry Johnson (‘67-’69) was a Junior College All-American with
28.4 points per game his sophomore year. Soccer star Chris Hultquist
(‘92-’95) still holds team records for 84 games played and 21 assists.
> ACADEMIC ALL-AMERICANS
“It could have been easy for this team to hang their heads after we
started 0-6,” said coach Joe Walton. “To their credit, they decided
that’s not what Robert Morris football was about. One game at a time,
they took it upon themselves to improve, and it’s extremely gratifying
to see us finish the way we did.”
The Colonials defense led the conference again by holding opponents
to only 276.3 yards per game; they allowed just 36 points in the final
five games while forcing 13 turnovers over that stretch. The team’s
emotional leader, junior linebacker Alex DiMichele, was a finalist for
NEC Defensive Player of the Year with 109 tackles, three sacks, two
interceptions, and four fumble recoveries. Junior halfback Myles Russ
had his second 1,000-yard season, and senior wide receiver Sherrod
Evers set a new record for receptions with 47. Freshman Jeff Sinclair
finished 5-2 as a starting quarterback, completing 78 of 145 passes for
828 yards and nine touchdowns against six interceptions.
> HALL OF FAME
Three athletes, all juniors, were selected by College Sports Information
Directors of America for the ESPN The Magazine District II
Academic All-America. Nuclear medicine technology Amanda
Graham (volleyball) has a 3.99 QPA, actuarial science major
Mike Lovely (football) has a 3.90, and elementary education
major Christy Baldesberger (soccer) has a 3.80.
> CROSS COUNTRY
The women placed seventh at the NEC championships in 2009, led by freshman
Kristie Domis, who posted a time of 19:28.9 in the 5,000-meter race to finish
20th individually. Sophomore Brian Mitchell paced the men, crossing the
finish line in the 8k race with a time of 27:31.4 to finish 23rd overall as
the squad recorded a ninth-place finish.
> VOLLEYBALL
> GRAHAM
The Colonials finished 11-5 in the NEC (14-20 overall) and earned their 11th consecutive berth in the conference
tournament, losing to eventual champion Long Island in the quarterfinals. Junior middle blocker Amanda
Graham made All-NEC First Team with an attack percentage of .332, third in the conference. Sophomore
Alyssa Bennett made All-NEC Second Team with an average of 8.57 assists per set, third best in the circuit.
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> MAKING THE TEAM
When the U.S. women’s hockey team takes the ice in Vancouver for next month’s
Winter Olympics, Brianne McLaughlin will be primed to get between the pipes.
One of three goalies on the roster, the former Colonials star has a reputation for
stopping shots—3,809 of them during her college career, an NCAA record.
A senior nursing major whose studies are on hold for the Olympics, McLaughlin
credits her older brother, Michael, for getting her started in hockey. “He was a
forward, so I guess that’s how I became a goalie,” she says. “He’d rather shoot
against his little sister than against a wall.” Their father still teases them about
the time one summer when, hearing shouting from the yard, he stepped outside
to investigate and found Michael running drills with Brianne, who was dressed
in full goalie pads in the sweltering heat and dropping again and again into
the “butterfly” stance.
Growing up in suburban Cleveland, McLaughlin played against boys until
high school. As a freshman starter in the RMU women’s inaugural year,
she got accustomed to facing a lot of pucks. McLaughlin responded by standing
on her head in game after game, most notably in the 2008-09 season opener
against No. 3-ranked Minnesota her senior year, in which the Golden Gophers
outshot the Colonials 65-10 and still lost 3-2.
McLaughlin is proud of her RMU career and says the team, under coach Nate
Handrahan, “is getting better every year.” Now as she travels and trains with the
best players in the country, McLaughlin enjoys reminding her powerhouse-school
teammates of her upstart alma mater. Eight players and U.S. coach Mark Johnson
hail from the University of Wisconsin, so when RMU upset the defending national
champion Badgers 3-1 in November, the former Colonials netminder had a lot
of fun at morning skate.
The Olympics have long been a dream of hers, and McLaughlin says she can’t
wait to march in the opening ceremonies: “It always looks so cool on TV, so it
will be interesting to see it from the middle of everything.”And she already has
checked out the new medal designs. She especially likes the look of the gold one.
WRITTEN BY MARK HOUSER
PHOTO BY USA HOCKEY
1 0 • R M U . E D U / F O U N D AT I O N S
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GOING
Those initiatives are paying off. A record 158 RMU students
participated in study abroad programs in the 2008-09
academic year, almost double the number who went
overseas the prior year.
week short tour of Finland
last June. Students visited
the University of Tampere,
attended an international
film festival, and climbed
to the top of the country’s
northernmost weather
station. Frampton, an
aspiring TV weatherman
who gives the forecasts
for RMU-TV, even had
an opportunity to
deliver a trial forecast
at the nation’s largest
commercial TV
station, in Helsinki.
“We got to talk
to broadcast
professionals, and learn
about technology in
Finland, which in
many ways is
a few years
ahead of us here
in the States,”
says Frampton.
“It was an amazing
opportunity that I
think will help in
my future.”
Junior media arts major Channing Frampton was concerned a
semester abroad would make it hard for him to complete his
degree on time. Instead, he opted for a faculty-guided three-
International experience as
a career plus is an idea that’s
gaining credence. The
Nursing in Nicaragua. Marketing in Athens. Accounting in
Dubai. And learning to live as a global citizen in China,
France, Vietnam, and Namibia.
Robert Morris University’s study abroad programs offer
students an expansive range of opportunities to travel, live,
and learn overseas. Experiencing other countries firsthand
allows students to see their own culture with fresh eyes. It
also helps them to become people who can work and live
with confidence born of successful day-to-day interactions in
the wider world.
A global perspective is an integral part of a complete RMU
education, and the university strives to ensure all students
have the chance to learn through travel. Exchange agreements
with a growing number of overseas universities lock in RMU
tuition costs for students spending a semester or year abroad.
Faculty-guided “short tours” — in which students spend
spring semester studying a country in class, then go there
with their professor for a few weeks in the summer — make
travel and study abroad possible for those unable to take
more time away from core classes and jobs. Short tours
include faculty-led trips by nursing students to China and
Nicaragua, film students to Gambia, and hospitality students
to Germany, France, and Switzerland.
1 2 • R M U . E D U / F O U N D AT I O N S
GL BAL
Committee for Economic Development, a non-partisan
advocacy group comprised of corporate executives and
university leaders, estimates that U.S. corporations lose $2
billion a year because of inadequate understanding of global
markets. “Employers are increasingly looking for workers
with international expertise and language skills because they
know it makes their organizations far more competitive in the
workplace,” says President Gregory Dell’Omo, Ph.D.
Senior accounting major Kevin Senko was all business
during his semester last spring at the American University of
Dubai. He roomed with a classmate from Nigeria and juggled
a rigorous schedule of classes, including international finance,
portfolio management, and history of the Middle East.
“The textbooks were American, but the issues we studied
came from the culture around us: currency exchange issues
in a port city, discussions about pegging the value of oil
to the U.S. dollar.”
“I want our students to feel comfortable living on the earth as
global citizens,” says Jim Vincent, Ph.D., a longtime English
literature professor who pioneered RMU’s exchange program
with the University of Limerick and has led student trips to
Ireland for the past three years. “We’re part of Pittsburgh’s
attempt to become a stronger player in international business
and commerce. You cannot do that with students who only
know Allegheny and Beaver counties.”
Adventuresome Audrey Petrus couldn’t decide between
Japan, Spain, or London. So the actuarial science major
opted for the Semester At Sea program last year,
visiting 12 countries including Spain, South Africa,
Mauritius, India, Vietnam, China, and Japan, with the
home stretch sailing through the Panama Canal. Her
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classes in global studies and physics were conducted when
the ship was at sea. In port, Petrus explored the bazaars of
Morocco, learned to meditate in Thailand, and made friends
everywhere she went. “You can sit down and have dinner
with someone in Namibia,” she says, “and see how it’s
different from sitting down and having dinner with someone
in India, and how that’s different from sitting down and
having dinner with someone in Japan. And how it’s
kind of the same.”
Michael Church, a senior accounting
and marketing major, spent four weeks in
Greece studying public relations at the
American College of Thessalonki before
setting out on his own for Estonia. The
loneliness of solo travel gripped him
for much of the first day, but it wore off
as he navigated his way around Tallinn,
tracking down the location of a cobbled medieval passageway
he’d seen photos of in books. “It was the coolest thing,”
Church says. “ ‘I’m here. I’m in another country. I’m on
my own, and I’m finding my way.’ ”
Social sciences senior Krystal McCoy spent three weeks in
Israel, where students camped with Bedouins near the ancient
ruins of Masada, explored the ancient streets and alleys of
Jerusalem, and swam in a natural spring alongside some
local women wearing bikinis and others wearing burkas.
“The most surprising thing for me was how warm and
welcoming people were, everywhere we went,” says McCoy.
RMU’s newly named executive director of international
programs, Ida Mansourian, says she is eager to expand both
the university’s study abroad programs and international
offerings on campus. “We don’t want student travel
experiences to just be a memory for their photo album,”
she says. “I would like it to be a teaser for them to start enhancing
their global understanding more and more, for when they enter
the workforce.” The Iranian native spent three years studying in
Germany before coming to the United States. In her last job as director
of international education at Mesa Community College in Arizona,
Mansourian launched a foreign film festival that is now in its sixth year.
Besides the advantage a global perspective can give graduates
entering the workforce, Vincent believes it also makes a significant
difference in their inner life. “College is a time of personal
growth, as much as learning accounting principles or comparative
literature,” he says. “Seeing the world is the best way to encourage
cultural diversity, and the best way to get people on the path of
self-discovery.”
WRITTEN BY BONNIE PFISTER
PHOTOGRAPHY PROVIDED BY OFFICE OF INTERNATIONAL STUDIES
AFTER A DISASTER, A HELPING HAND
Despite an exam looming the next day, Luca
Lugini was
fast asleep early on April 6 in a house he share
d with two
other students at the University of L’Aquila
in Italy.
Suddenly, a massive earthquake shook them
into terrified
wakefulness. “We ran outside,” Lugini recal
ls. “It was
really cold. There were many people in the
street in just
their pajamas.”
Lugini spent the rest of the morning in his room
mate’s car.
The dawn broke on a sickening sight: Dozens
of buildings
were reduced to rubble in the capital of Italy’
s Abruzzo
region. Nearly 300 people would be found dead
, and some
65,000 left homeless. Of those killed, 55 were
students of
the university; several buildings on the camp
us of 27,000
students also were destroyed.
Five thousand miles away, western Pennsylva
nians began
thinking about what they could do to help.
“By the second
day, it was clear this was a bigger catastroph
e than it
14 • RMU.EDU/FOU
N D AT
IONS
initially seemed,” says Joseph D’Andrea, a
retired
language teacher at Moon Area School Distr
ict and
president of the American Italian Cultural Instit
ute
(AMICI) of Pittsburgh, “I began to think, ‘The
community
must respond in some way.’ ”
D’Andrea is a good friend of RMU. The univ
ersity
awarded him an honorary doctorate of letter
s last
spring, after he accompanied President Greg
ory Dell’Omo,
Ph.D., and Provost David Jamison, J.D., on
a trip to Italy’s
Molise region to explore study abroad agree
ments with
Italian universities.
Together they came up with a plan: AMICI woul
d raise
money to pay for room, board, a monthly stipe
nd, and
round-trip plane tickets for two students, and
RMU would
pay their tuition and fees for a year. “We thou
ght the best
investment is in young people, rather than in
sending
money to help reconstruct buildings,” D’Andrea says.
The RMU scholarships were among 35 offered to L’Aquila
students for study at U.S. and Canadian universities after
the deadly earthquake. Another 160 students received
offers to attend European universities.
On August 20—one day before classes began—Lugini, 21,
a Campobasso native, and Berardo Artieri, 25, of Teramo,
arrived in Pittsburgh. Lugini is completing a bachelor’s degree
in software engineering, while Artieri is pursuing a master ’s
degree in engineering management. “My first impression:
Everything is bigger here,” Lugini says. “Cars, streets,
buildings. It was very strange… But everyone is also so
much friendlier than in Italy, especially in those first days.”
“The friendliness of everybody is impressive,” Artieri
concurs. “You can speak to professors informally here,
almost as if they’re friends.” And he adds, “the studies
seem more practical. In Italy you study many, many
proofs that you will never need.”
Both have made friends living on campus, taking in American
football games and experiencing a South Side packed with
costumed college students on Halloween. One of their first
projects at RMU was translating and recording Italian audio
for a series of foreign language walking tours of downtown
Pittsburgh the university produced for the G-20 summit.
Lugini and Artieri say they are grateful to the community
members, professors, and fellow students who are helping
them to complete their studies. “This is not just a beautiful
campus, but it’s full of beautiful people,” Lugini says. “I
would definitely tell students back in my country to come
here if they can.”
AMICI is continuing to seek contributions to support Lugini and
Artieri through the spring semester. Those wishing to help may
contact D’Andrea at (412) 264-2485 or [email protected].
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Soon Katselas and contractor Pasquale Navarro were driving
a convertible across the 230-acre property’s rolling fields,
past the former mansion of Oliver Kaufmann (whose
brother owned Fallingwater), down a hillside and into a
hollow. “I threw stones where dorms would go, put pins
where the road would go, and laid out stakes for classrooms,”
Katselas recalls. “On butcher paper we drew up the dorms—
very rough sketches. Within three weeks, the contractor
began digging.”
It was, as Katselas says, “an instant campus.” The builders
put a temporary half-tent, half-plywood addition on the
mansion so students could eat and live on campus. The
next year, they started building the student union, the
Jefferson Center.
An intrepid artist, Katselas was philosophically influenced
by Frank Lloyd Wright’s honest expression of materials and
space. It’s hard to look at Jefferson and not think of Wright’s
Fallingwater. Cantilevered entryway roofs, poured concrete,
and the way the building nestles into the hillside all evoke
images of the famous Edgar Kaufmann home. Katselas
humbly refuses to compare his work to Wright’s masterpiece.
“I hope all of my work reflects an authentic expression of use,
with a healthy dose of spirit. I think Frank Lloyd Wright
would like that.”
For many years, campus social life revolved around Jefferson.
Education professor and retired dean Jon Shank, Ed.D.,
recalls meeting colleagues in Jefferson for 65-cent lunches.
“Athletic banquets, convocations, President Sewall's
inauguration, and most other important events were
held in its dining area,” Shank says.
Tasso Katselas was a young architect just making his
name in 1963; his signature works, including Pittsburgh
International Airport and the Carnegie Science Center, were
yet to come. He had only designed some housing in a
downtown hotel for Robert Morris students when J.R.
McCartan, the school’s owner and president, approached
Katselas with a challenge: Could he design a new campus on
a sprawling Moon Township estate the school had bought,
one that could be functioning in less than a year?
Katselas intended the union as the focal point for visitors
driving up the old main road, but the campus entrance was
changed. Eventually Jefferson’s dining hall, bookstore, and
post office, which once had drawn heavy student traffic,
found other homes. The upper level became a fitness
center, while the lower level was storage space.
But after substantial renovations in the fall, Jefferson’s onceunderutilized lower level now boasts a glass-walled 24/7
computer lab, the only one on campus open overnight. There
is also a Veterans Education and Training Services Center to
accommodate the growing number of military personnel at
RMU, an expanded phonathon room, and a student lounge
with comfortable seating. Each space has security cameras
and two clearly marked exits for safety.
Bill Joyce, RMU architect and director of planning and
design, worked with interior designer Shannon Eisenreich
and contractor Graziano Construction. They incorporated
some “green” elements, such as paint low in volatile
compounds and lights that dim when a room is empty.
But they tried to respect Katselas’s design; for instance, they
removed a drop ceiling that had masked the original coffered
concrete. “We’re letting the architecture be part of the
character of the space,” Joyce says.
Like Katselas’ other campus buildings, Hale, Franklin, and
the newly renovated residence halls, Jefferson displays his
trademarks: exposed concrete, roof monitors to let in natural
light, mullionless glass to draws the eye into the building,
and poured-in-place ceilings and flooring. “We’re surrounded
by Tasso’s buildings,” Joyce says, gesturing to the scattered
structures that flow down the hillsides, connected
by walkways.
RMU has changed substantially since those early days. A
stroll around the rest of campus today reveals an eclectic
collection of buildings. “After Tasso we had a variety of
designers, and there’s not much consistency of materials,”
Joyce says. That’s something he and others have been trying
to change with new buildings like the Nicholson Center,
Rogal Chapel, the residence hall renovations and planned
new buildings for the business and nursing schools. “One of
our challenges is not to create a distinct look, but a palate of
materials that we might ask architects to use. We wouldn’t
tell them how to design new buildings, but would give them
materials—such as brick, standing seam metal roofs, the
selected use of stone—to create a consistency of look.“
Although each generation of buildings presents new styles
with unique aesthetic and practical values, Joyce believes it’s
worth the effort to maintain original designs. “I think people
respond to quality spaces and are inspired by them, especially
when they understand an architect and what inspired the
design originally.”
WRITTEN BY JENNIFER GILL KISSEL
ILLUSTRATIONS BY HENRY KOERNER
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SIMULATIONS
MRS. GONZALES LIES IN A HOSPITAL BED AS SHE RECOVERS FROM LEG SURGERY.
ALL AROUND, HIGH-TECH EQUIPMENT MONITORS HER CONDITION, WHILE HER
CONCERNED DAUGHTER SITS AT THE FOOT OF THE BED, WAITING.
TWO NURSES ENTER THE ROOM TO SEE HOW SHE IS DOING. “MY LEG,”
SHE SAYS, “IT REALLY HURTS.” ONE OF THE NURSES CHECKS THE SURGICAL
WOUND ON MRS. GONZALES’ LEG AND FINDS THAT IT’S BLEEDING AND
NEEDS IMMEDIATE ATTENTION. THE OTHER NURSE CALLS THE DOCTOR
FOR GUIDANCE ON THE PROPER MEDICATION AND DOSAGE.
SUDDENLY, MRS. GONZALES IS HAVING TROUBLE BREATHING. THE
NURSES JUMP INTO ACTION. THEY CHECK THE WOMAN’S BLOOD
PRESSURE, TEMPERATURE, PULSE. THEY DETERMINE THE CAUSE TO
BE ACUTE PAIN AND DO THEIR BEST TO BRING HER COMFORT.
ONCE THE SITUATION IS UNDER CONTROL, THEY EXPLAIN
EVERYTHING CLEARLY TO MRS. GONZALES’ ANXIOUS
DAUGHTER, IN ORDER TO EASE HER MIND.
AND JUST LIKE THAT, THE SIMULATION IS OVER.
18 • R M U . E D U / F O U N D AT I O N S
FOR SUCCESS
RMU simulation specialist Janice Sarasnick, RN, MSN,
leaves the observation room, where she has been watching
this unfold, and goes out to congratulate nursing students
Lauren Matkan and Dustin Huerta on a job well done
and to debrief them on the hospital emergency exercise.
Mrs. Gonzales, by the way, is fine. After all, she’s just a
dummy—a really smart dummy.
This is just another day in RMU’s new state-of-the-art
simulation laboratory in the university’s School of
Nursing and Health Sciences. It’s the university’s
latest effort to provide a hands-on, engaged
education to its students.
“Robert Morris University has
always believed that learning
doesn’t just take place in the
classroom,” says school Dean
Lynda Davidson, Ph.D., RN. “This new
simulation laboratory is another example of
our commitment to provide our students with real-life
experiences that will enhance their education and better
prepare them for their future career.”
The new lab was made possible by a $250,000 grant from
Highmark Blue Cross Blue Shield; a $500,000 state grant from
the Pennsylvania Department of Labor and Industry, which
was presented by state Rep. Mark Mustio and state Sen.
John Pippy; as well as a $95,000 federal grant made possible
through the efforts of U.S. Sens. Robert Casey Jr. and Arlen
Specter. Located inside RMU’s John Jay Center, it features
two high-fidelity treatment rooms, one critical-care room, two
classrooms, one low-fidelity nursing practice lab, and multiple
office areas, as well as advanced audio-visual and IT
equipment that allows for scheduling and administrative
support, debriefing recordings, and live audio-visual feeds.
“The additional funding allowed us not only to purchase the
new mannequins and state-of-the-art recording equipment but
also to hire and train dedicated staff to assist in the simulation
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lab,” says nursing professor Valerie M. Howard, Ed.D.,
MSN, RN, director of the simulation lab.
The current facility was a much-needed upgrade to RMU’s
previous nursing simulation capabilities, which lacked the
technology and space to provide a realistic learning experience
for the students. As the demand for this type of simulationbased training grows among regional health care
organizations, the university plans to further expand its
capabilities with a new 23,000-square-foot simulation center,
which will be known as the RMU Regional Research and
Innovation in Simulation Education (RISE) Center. This new
facility is tentatively scheduled to be completed in 2011.
Now, thanks to recent technological innovations, simulationbased training is becoming more common in the health care
industry. RMU’s School of Nursing and Health Sciences began
utilizing high-fidelity simulation with its nurse training in
2005. Since that time, the nursing educational curriculum has
evolved to employ simulation across the board, in clinical
undergraduate, master’s level, and doctoral courses.
“This type of hands-on learning is so important because it
allows them to make mistakes now rather than later,” says
Howard, whose research, which focuses on evaluating
learning outcomes related to the use of simulation, shows that
students find simulation superior to the case study approach.
Perozzi has a bachelor’s degree in math and nursing and a
master’s in nursing education. Before coming to RMU, she
taught fundamentals and obstetric nursing for 10 years at the
University of Pittsburgh. She says that this first phase of the
RISE Center will provide valuable simulation opportunities
to hospital personnel, nursing schools, and other medical
professionals in the region.
Many universities and health care organizations across the
country are already taking advantage of simulation as a
learning tool. What’s unique about RMU’s simulation lab
is that it’s meant to be an open educational resource not just
for the university but for the region’s health care providers
also. Already, local organizations like Heritage Valley Health
System, St. Clair Hospital, Ohio Valley General Hospital,
Valley Ambulance Authority, Pittsburgh Technical Institute,
and other patient safety organizations and initiatives have
shown an interest in collaborating with RMU for training and
educational purposes. Once these partnerships are finalized,
RMU will serve the region as a major source for simulationbased training and competency testing.
Both the military and the aviation industry have been using
simulation for decades to safely train their people in real-life
situations. Over the years, schools of nursing have used
computer simulation to promote critical thinking skills.
“The new simulation lab was developed with strong
participation and coordination across health care specialties,
in order to provide multidisciplinary health care training to
positively impact patient safety”, says Howard. “It gives us
“Simulation is great for providing students a variety of
experiences,” says professor Katherine J. Perozzi, MSN, RN,
low-fidelity simulation lab coordinator. “It allows them to feel
that they have indeed managed such a situation before, and it
makes them feel more confident in the actual clinical setting.”
2 0 • R M U . E D U / F O U N D AT I O N S
the opportunity to provide simulation-based education to our
regional partners in health care and research.”
The real stars of this new lab are the patient simulators. At first
glance, you may think you’re looking at a normal, department
store mannequin. Then you see its eyes blink and its chest
rising up and down. And then you hear it cough. These aren’t
your mother’s mannequins. They’re high-fidelity simulators
that can mimic any number of medical conditions, and they
help the students feel as if they’re working with real, live
patients in a safe and controlled environment.” We not only
have the best equipment,” Howard says, “we have the best,
most capable team of experts who know how to use it to its
full capacity.”
The lab features two high-fidelity adult simulation
mannequins, a birthing simulator with newborn, an infant
(6-month-old) mannequin, a pediatric (5-year-old) mannequin,
and model body parts called “partial task trainers,” which
are used to teach different skills. Each is computerized
with interactive capabilities to simulate physiological
and pharmacological responses in real time. You can even
interchange parts on them to simulate various conditions,
such as a bleeding wound or a swollen ankle.
“This technology in this new lab is much more advanced than
what the students used to work with,” says Chuck Simon,
simulation lab technician. “Overall, it’s a more realistic
hospital atmosphere.” The scenario described above is
called “Gonzales 28.” instructors also have access to 30
other scenarios, each with a customized electronic medical
record that allows for a more realistic clinical setting.
The new lab utilizes three separate software packages to
conduct the simulations. One microphone in the control room
enables the instructor to be the voice of patient, and another,
which they call the “Voice of God,” is an intercom used for
other communications. The simulation rooms themselves
closely resemble typical hospital rooms, from the IV drips to
the bedside monitors, all the way down to the in-room phone.
Audio-visual equipment, such as digital video recorders,
editing software, monitors, and microphones, provide live
remote viewing, immediate feedback, and after-action
review during the debriefing period. The lab also features an
information management system that assists with scheduling,
monitoring of usage, and measuring outcomes.
“I used to work in a hospital, and I found the simulation
to be very lifelike,” said Huerta, a second-degree student,
who earned a BS in political science/biology at RMU before
coming back for nursing. “For example, being able to call
the doctor on the phone in the room was very realistic.”
Jill Barney, who played Mrs. Gonzales’ concerned daughter
in the scenario, is also impressed by the power of simulation.
“It’s fun, stress-free, and with all of the new technology, you
really feel as if you’re in a hospital. I think simulation is a
great way to learn how to care for a patient in a learning
environment.”
WRITTEN BY VALENTINE J. BRKICH
PHOTOGRAPHY BY TERRY CLARK
R O B E R T M O R R I S U N I V E R S I T Y F O U N D AT I O N S • 21
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10:45 AM
At the height of the Gilded Age a century ago, Judge Elbert
Gary, chairman of U. S. Steel, declared that his company
would be held to a higher ethical standard. His “Gary
Principles” were the first code of business ethics adopted
by an American corporation.
Pressure from Wall Street—especially from investors who
want short-term results—makes it challenging to stay
committed to ethical behavior, says Somma, who is now
a private industry consultant and vice chairman of Tower
Automotive. But it’s imperative, he believes. So he established
the Rande and Georgia Somma Integrity First Scholarships,
$2,500 awards given annually to four RMU undergraduates
who write the best essays analyzing moral or ethical issues
in a business case study.
“When I talk about being ethical and integrity being critical
when it comes to being a legitimately
competent leader, people start to think
“If we succeed in business, we must do so on principles that
that I’m some sort of prophet of
are honest, fair, lawful, and just.” – Judge Elbert Gary
righteousness. And they want to know,
`Doesn’t the profitability matter?’ Yes, but
that’s why I’m doing it this way. Profitability matters, but
In her address at the 2009 graduate commencement ceremony,
over the long term also,” he says. “Performance matters,
Dr. Susan M. Kapusta ’81, U. S. Steel general manager for
but
the authenticity of performance matters more.”
community affairs and president of the corporation’s
foundation, said the legacy of the “Gary Principles”
continues. For Kapusta and the other 161 RMU alumni who
work at U. S. Steel, their education also has helped them
develop a sense of propriety. “At this university, the concept
of ethics is embedded in the business curriculum,” she told
the graduates. “There is a discussion of ethics in every course.
The faculty sets an example for professional focus that points
the way to creating ethical professional leaders.”
2 2 • r m u .e d u / f o u n d a t i o n s
WRITTEN BY MARK HOUSER
Go to Foundations Online to find out more about Somma’s
Integrity First Scholarship, watch Kapusta’s speech, and read
the full “Gary Principles.”
Being president of a wealth management firm with $700
million in assets and a regular on Barron’s annual lists of the
country’s top 100 financial advisors, Carrie Coghill-Kuntz ’08
has a lot to be proud of. But despite her successes in 20 years
in the business, the Brentwood native long dreamed of
something more.
community college. Known as a consumer
advocate and widely quoted in both local and
national media, she has written two books on
investing and is involved with economics education
programs for schoolchildren, professionals, and
the general public.
“I kind of laugh when people ask, ‘What year did you
graduate?’ For me it’s kind of an honor just to have a year,”
says Coghill-Kuntz. The president and co-founder of D.B.
Root & Co. in downtown Pittsburgh earned her bachelor’s
in organizational studies last year from RMU.
One person she particularly remembers educating was
her daughter, Kelli. When Kelli was 8, she spent a day
at the office with her mom, and later made a memorable
observation. “On the way home, she looked at me and she
said, ‘You lied to me,’” recalls Coghill-Kuntz. “I said, ‘What
are you talking about?’ And she said, ‘You said you talk to
people about money, but you don’t do that. You talk to
people about their lives.’”
“In business you hear people say it’s all about our employees,
that they make it happen. But to be able to gain an
understanding of what an employee is looking for in a
good leader completely opened up a new perspective
for me,” she says.
Besides her recognition from Barron’s, Coghill-Kuntz was
chosen among the “Top 50 Women in Wealth Management”
this year by Wealth Manager magazine; the Pittsburgh Business
Times also named her one of the year’s “Top 25 Women in
Business.” For her distinguished record of service and
accomplishment, RMU honored its recent alumna with
the 2009 Heritage Award.
Coghill-Kuntz says she always loved numbers, and jumped
right into the world of finance after getting
an associate’s degree in accounting from
0
“It’s a very satisfying career when you can watch
people save enough money to achieve
their retirement, or get
their dream house, or
educate their children
or grandchildren,”
Coghill-Kuntz says.
“I feel very fortunate
that I have the
ability to touch
so many people.”
WRITTEN BY
MARK HOUSER
0
to the public and appeared before Congress to account
for every penny. Fully exonerated, Morris became one of
Pennsylvania’s first senators. He even handed the keys to his
own mansion in Philadelphia, then the nation’s capital, over
to his good friend, George Washington, so the first chief
executive could have the best house in town.
a
more than NumbEr
1
After two decades climbing the corporate ladder, Rande
Somma ’73 was named president of North
American operations for a Fortune 100
“I am not ignorant that many people employ themselves in
defaming men whom they do not know and measures which Detroit auto parts supplier, a $17
they do not understand. To such illiberal characters the best billion operation. He called a
meeting, and told the staff their
answer is to act well.” – Robert Morris
first action would be to write down a list of things they
would not do to succeed. “When you firewall illegitimate
For Robert Morris, ethics was fundamental. The wealthy
means of reaching an end, you now place 100 percent of the
Philadelphia merchant, congressman, and superintendent
burden on your competence and skill and your talent, and the
of finance for the American government during the
kind
of organizational culture you create, the kind of people
Revolutionary War often used his own credit to ensure that
you
surround
yourself with, how you approach the business,”
troops were armed, fed, and paid. His enemies accused him
he says. “It changes everything.”
of war profiteering, so Morris opened the government’s books
4
“Ethics is not someone else's responsibility—it's your personal
responsibility,” concluded Kapusta. “Let your own personal
moral compass chart your course and point you in the
direction of what is right."
2
S
ome say ethics is merely a high-minded abstraction
to be put aside when reality strikes. At Robert Morris
University, we believe ethics is not the opposite of
pragmatism, but is instead the keystone of a successful
career. That’s what we teach our students. Of course, we
have a good role model.
8
Acting Well
3
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UP CLOSE AND PERSONAL
STUDENT PROFILE
FACULTY PROFILE
Carl Ross
The nursing professor has been taking faculty and students to Nicaragua
since 1995. There, through a collaborative agreement with the Universidad
Politechnica de Nicaragua, they provide much-needed health care and
preventative education to poor residents in urban barrios and rural villages.
Ross, who came to RMU from Duquesne University in 2005, just completed
his 69th trip in November with 10 undergraduate nursing majors.
“These trips are transformational for the students,” says Ross. “They not only
get solid clinical experience, they get to change the lives of others and, at the
same time, are changed themselves. It’s really a powerful experience all around.”
Ross’s transformation has also had an effect on his
students. “I’ve become a role model for many of them,”
he says, “especially for the seniors, who knew me when
I was heavy.” During his trips to Nicaragua, Ross’s
students see how he lives firsthand. “They see my
eating habits and how I get up every morning
and walk, and they say, ‘I’m going
to get up and walk with you.’”
At the age of 10, Rentler lost her father to liver cancer. The Caring Place, an
organization that helps grieving families cope with loss, provided comfort to the
Rentlers. Wanting to give back to the organization, she started attending special
events on its behalf, giving speeches to audiences in the hundreds. At RMU, Rentler
has volunteered as a student counselor for students who have lost a parent or loved
one. “People may forget what you said or what you did,” she explains, “but they will
never forget how you made them feel.”
The marketing major and Mt. Lebanon native comes from a long line of relatives who
attended RMU. Rentler is an RA, vice president of student government, and president
of the campus chapter of American Humanics, an organization that prepares
undergraduates for the nonprofit sector. She also works in the Office of Student
Civic Engagement, coordinating events and matching up student organizations
with volunteer opportunities. For instance, she planned
a winter carnival the men’s lacrosse team held for
students at the Bradley Center, a residential
program for at-risk children. She also organized
a campus leadership summit last year for 250
high school students.
“Laura has really developed in to a leader in
the last couple of years, and it’s really been
rewarding for me to watch her grow
into that,” says Randon Willard,
community and volunteer services
coordinator for the university.
WRITTEN BY
AUBREY DIVITO ‘08
WRITTEN BY
VALENTINE J. BRKICH
24
rmu.edu/foundations
As a member of RMU’s Wellness Committee, Ross also works to
improve the health of faculty and staff. He helped initiate
the university’s Weight Watchers program in 2007, and
has become one of its success stories, losing a whopping
150 pounds through better eating habits and regular
exercise. “I was always obese,” says Ross, who was
once nearly 400 pounds. “I had to change my whole
lifestyle. Now I wouldn’t think of going to bed
without working out. Exercise has truly become
a part of my life.”
Along with the textbooks she carries to class, Laura Rentler carries with her a wide,
welcoming smile and an inner ambition to reach out to all those in need.
Laura Rentler
Wellness is both a passion and a way of life for Carl Ross, Ph.D., CRNP-BC, CNE.
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CLASS NOTES
RAYMOND T. BOOK ’47
is a former state representative
for the 41st district, and reports
that his proudest accomplishment
was proposing two bills that were
signed into law: House Bill 1155,
which let people declare organ
donor status on their driver’s
license, and House Bill 90, which
arranged for doctors to discuss
organ donation with next of kin
after a patient’s death. Ray lives
in Brentwood.
>
1960s
THOMAS D. MCKINNEY ’62 is
chapter president of the National
Active and Retired Federal
Employees in Dunwoody, Ga.,
where he recently presented a
certificate of appreciation to
Georgia Congressman Tom Price
for his support of active and
retired federal employees. A
veteran, he served in Vietnam,
Korea, Europe, and Panama
during a 35-year career with the
U.S. Army Audit Agency. Tom
and his wife, Sandra, live in
Atlanta.
1970s
ROBERT HELLER ’74 was named
chief financial officer of Heritage
Ministries, a Jamestown, N.Y.,
nonprofit agency that provides
2 6 • R M U . E D U / F O U N D AT I O N S
assisted living for seniors and
social services to seniors and
children. Robert formerly was
chief financial officer of
Montgomery Place in Chicago,
and has held financial officer
positions in senior living facilities
in the Pittsburgh area. He lives in
Chautauqua County, N.Y.
ELBERT “ELBIE” YAWORSKY ’75
was named executive director for
3 Rivers Connect, a Pittsburgh
nonprofit organization that
provides data on the local
economy, regional social services,
and recreational programs and
activities. Elbie has been on the
organization’s board since
2005. Elbie and his wife DENISE
SCARSELLA YAWORSKY ’76 live
in Ambridge.
JES HUTSON ’76 is cofounder
of the newly created Fayette
County Sports Hall of Fame,
which inducted its first class in
July. Jes has been a kinesiology
faculty member with Penn State
Fayette, the Eberly Campus,
for 13 years and lives in
Uniontown.
DARNELL L. WILLIAMS ’80 is an
investment advisor and the
author of the “Bond Investments”
blog on Blogspot and the book
Building Wealth with Corporate
Bonds. He lives in Harrisburg.
>
1940s
CLASS NOTES
ROBERT D. BEER ’81 joined
First National Bank in August as
senior vice president with FNB
Business Credit Department. Bob
was previously senior vice
president, senior portfolio
manager with RBS/Citizens
Business Capital. He and his wife,
CYNTHIA MOLDOVAN BEER ’81,
live in New Brighton.
JOHN M. SWIATEK ’82 was
appointed director of GSP
Consulting’s new division
specializing in sports,
entertainment, and marketing.
Previously John was president
and managing partner of the
Washington Wild Things minor
league baseball club. He lives
in Pittsburgh.
DAVID HAMMER ’83 was
appointed Pittsburgh regional
president for Huntington
Bancshares Inc. in July. He
previously was executive vice
president and managing director
of National City Corp.’s wealth
management operation in
Pennsylvania. David lives
in McKees Rocks.
MARTIN WEBLER M’86 is a
business management specialist
for the National Energy
Technology Laboratory’s project
financing and technology
department in Pittsburgh. He was
previously with Duquesne Light
Co. Martin lives in Mt. Lebanon.
NELLIE F. MELLS ’89 was named
president of the Pittsburgh
chapter of the National Contract
Management Association for
2009-10. Nellie works for
Bechtel Plant Machinery Inc.
research as part of her master’s
1990s
pastor of the Beacon Liberty
LAURI A. LISANTI ’87 was promoted
to senior consultant at Goff Backa
Alfera & Company LLC, where
she has been a member of the
professional staff since 2003.
Lauri lives in Fox Chapel with
her husband, Jerry, and two
daughters.
KARA D. RUTOWSKI ‘91 M’06,
in Christ in Meadville, and
director of development at
the assistant superintendent
The Early Learning Institute,
for seven churches in the Erie
in nonprofit management at
RMU, with professors
JEFFREY GUILER, Ph.D.,
and KURT SCHIMMEL, DBA.
DANA YAGULLI ’94 and Victor
Mejia were married on June 6.
Dana is employed with Crown
Castle International and Victor
serves in the US Army. The
Mejias live in Washington, Pa.
TYRONE T. STEALS ’91 is the
Street Temple Church of God
recently had research she
district. Tyrone and his wife,
coauthored on nonprofit
Tracy, have four children:
Benchmarking: An International
benchmarking published in
Journal. Kara conducted the
Tyonna, Tyrone, Tyra,
and Tynesha.
DOUG PETRAS ’94 was inducted
into the Norwin School District
Sports Hall of Fame in July as a
former three-time all-state soccer
goalie and a scholastic AllAmerican as a senior. Doug
was also a two-time All-American
at RMU, and played soccer
professionally with the Tampa
Bay Mutiny and Chicago Fire.
(cont.)
JOAN HOROHO M’83 is a
financial assistant with
Trebuchet Consulting LLC,
in Upper St. Clair.
1980s
DEBI RONCZKA LEOPARDI ’80 has
been named general manager of
Value Ambridge Properties at the
Ambridge Regional Distribution
& Manufacturing Center. She is
responsible for operations and
budgeting for the 85-acre
industrial business park in Beaver
County. Debi has been with the
company for five years and
previously was its director of
business. She lives in Baden.
> Our Favorite Fashion Expert
TOM JULIAN ’83, the star of our Spring 2008 issue, has written
the Nordstrom Guide to Men’s Style, a hardcover guidebook
published by the major department store. His Tom Julian
Group in Manhattan provides marketing consulting and
consumer research. See his interview on Foundations Online.
ALUMNI HAPPY HOUR
FAMILY FUN
MEN'S AND WOMEN'S HOOPS DOUBLEHEADER VS. ST. FRANCIS
FOR DETAILS, CALL 397-2586
IF YOU MISSED HOMECOMING, DON'T MISS WINTER BLAST!
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CLASS NOTES
Doug is employed with the
Lower Paxton Township Police
Department. He and his wife,
LIANE SCHILPP PETRAS ’95, live
in Harrisburg with their sons,
Jacob and Evan.
JAMES R. POLLIARD JR. ’94 is
the accounting manager for
FrankCrum in Clearwater, Fla.,
and has earned an MBA from the
University of Tampa. James lives
in Indian Rocks Beach, Fla.
VICKY VENTO ’94 is employed
with PHH Mortgage dealing with
its Fox Chapel, Hampton and
Butler offices. She has been in the
mortgage industry 18 years, and
is a recipient of the Mortgage
Bankers Association of
CLASS NOTES
Pennsylvania Platinum Superstar
award. Vicky lives in Pittsburgh.
Federal Home Loan Bank of
Pittsburgh, was appointed to the
DAVID W. DURBAN II ’96, M’05 is
Pennsylvania Bankers Association
professional development policy
partner and chief information
officer of BlackBall Online. His
start-up company provides
Internet marketing services to
committee in July. He lives in
Pittsburgh.
JOHN L. FISHER ’98 was promoted
to vice president, ticket sales
Class Notes would love to hear from you.
Pittsburgh small business owners.
KRISTINA
FAUSTI ’97, director of legal and
regulatory affairs for Fiduciary360
JASON HALPERIN ’96 and
KIMBERLY MONTAG HALPERIN ’96
in Sewickley, will join the board
of the Financial Planning
are the proud parents of Jacob
Meyer, born on May 7. Kimberly
is a medical claims analyst
for United Health Care. The
Halperins live in Las Vegas.
Association of Pittsburgh this
year as director of government
affairs. Kristina lives in Presto.
ROBERT MERENICK ’96, vice
president and manager of
business development for
is a partner with Grossman
Yanak & Ford LLP in Pittsburgh.
He lives in Wexford.
DONALD S. JOHNSTON M’97
will serve as president of the
Allegheny Tax Society. Donald
MATT MONROE ’99 is assistant
athletic director for ticket services
at the University of Maryland.
He lives in Crofton, Md.
KRISTAN BOSAK WEIR ’00 and
DANIEL WEIR ’01 and big sister
Grace welcomed Lily Christine,
born September 2. Dan is vice
president for Aon Benfield. The
Weirs live in Mt. Lebanon.
TODD AHERN ’01, M’05 and his
wife, Terri, are the proud parents
of Lucas Michael, born September
12. He joins big brother Matthew,
3. Todd is a system analyst with
PPG Industries. The Aherns live
in Allison Park.
SEE SHOTS FROM
Your guide will be Professor James Vincent, noted raconteur and expert on Irish literature,
history, culture, and legend. All arrangements by Gulliver's Travels of Shadyside.
For details, call Jay Carson at (412) 397-5870 or email [email protected].
2 8 • R M U . E D U / F O U N D AT I O N S
"RMU SIX OUT,"
WHERE THE CLASS OF '09
MET TO NETWORK
DANIEL G. HORGAN ’02 is director
of community affairs with
Capital One in the Washington,
D.C., area. Dan previously
served as executive director
of Pittsburgh Cares.
ANNA REED ’02 married Alex
Kaleida on August 15. Anna is an
executive administrative assistant
with H.J. Heinz Co. Alex is a
Penn State graduate and also is
employed at H.J. Heinz. They
live in Ross Township.
AND SHARE THEIR
STORIES SINCE
GRADUATION DAY
AT RMU.EDU/FOUNDATIONS
Shenango Valley Chamber
of Commerce gave them the
Phoenix Award for Entrepreneur
of the Year. Kevin lives in
Hermitage.
E-mail us at [email protected].
brother Connor, 3. Nikki is a
financial consultant with Wells
Fargo Home Mortgage. The
Franciscuses live in
Hagerstown, Md.
WEB
EXCLUSIVE
Join Greg and Polly Dell'Omo and a band of merry travelers on an unforgettable tour of Ireland.
NIKKI SOTO FRANCISCUS ’00 and
her husband, John, became the
proud parents of Owen, born
on May 29. He joins big
and service for the Arizona
Diamondbacks, overseeing sales
for all groups, suites, and
season tickets. He joined the
Diamondbacks in 2007 as
director of season tickets sales.
2010 ALUMNI TOUR
SEE THE EMERALD ISLE IN STYLE
MAY 16-24
2000s
KEVIN MCDERMOTT ’02 and his
brother opened a Minuteman
Press franchise in 2005 in
Hermitage, Pa. In May, the
KETURAH ELAINE WASLER ’02
recently published a book of
poetry, Box of Chocolates. She
works for Matthews Packaging
Graphics as a consignment
purchasing manager and
divisional financial services
specialist. Keturah lives
in Pittsburgh.
BOBBIE JO BELUS ’03 is assistant
director of development for the
Duquesne University department
of athletics. Bobbie Jo lives
in Conway.
AMY LUTE ’03 and RYAN SUTTON
’03 have set May 29, 2010, as
their wedding date. Amy is a
reservation manager at the Hyatt
Regency Hotel at the Pittsburgh
Airport and lives in Aliquippa.
Ryan lives in Moon Township.
STACY SUSTAR RITCHART ’03 was
awarded the President’s Club
award from FedEx as one of
the top sales professionals in
the country. She has worked at
FedEx since 2007. Stacy and her
husband, DOUG RITCHART ’01,
live in Hopewell with their 2year-old daughter, Ella Agnessa.
PAUL D. SPRADLEY ’03, M’06 will
serve on the Greater Pittsburgh
Literacy Council board. Paul is
the assistant director of student
life for multicultural affairs at
RMU. He lives in Avalon.
> Alumni Awards
In a Homecoming ceremony at the 50-yard line, CATHERINE D.
TREXLER ’01 (pictured above with Spiegel, Dell’Omo, and Kaiser)
was presented with the RMU Alumni Association’s 2009 Alumni
Achievement Award in recognition of her professional distinction.
As management analyst for the Allegheny County Department
of Public Works, Catherine orchestrates a program that led her
employer to become the first agency in Pennsylvania accredited
by the American Public Works Association.
CHRISTOPHER J. KAISER ‘00, senior account executive with Johnson
Controls, won the Young Alumni Achievement Award. Chris was
a live liver donor for his mother in 2003, and serves on the board
of the American Liver Foundation’s Western Pennsylvania
Chapter, as well as his local library board.
The university library’s cataloging and government documents
assistant, KAREN SPIEGEL ‘06, received the Alumni Service Award.
Besides her service on the university’s Women’s History Month
Committee and work coordinating the 2007 Women’s History
Month Health Fair, Karen is active in the Boy Scouts of America
as a merit badge counselor.
SARAH E. VIJLEE M’03 and LUCAS
E. BROWN ’99 announced their
engagement. They are planning
a wedding for this fall.
STACEY YABLONSKI ’03 was
promoted to manager of the
accounting and audit department
at Alpern Rosenthal. She lives
in Monaca.
JEFF FONDELIER M’04 was named
vice president of operations of
Community Action Southwest,
a social services agency for
Washington and Greene counties.
He has been with the agency
since 2004. Jeff lives in
Bethel Park.
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CLASS NOTES
facebook
Home
Profile
CLASS NOTES
Friends
lnbox
Robert Morris hopes you will friend him on Facebook.
Wall
Info
Photos
Flair
Boxes
Pittsburgh College Hockey Showcase 2010 watching
the Colonials battle the UConn Huskies!
Fri at 2:30 pm
Brianne McLaughlin likes this.
View Photos of Me (19)
Why you should
View Videos of Me (1)
be Robert's
Edit My Profile
"friend"...
Get updates on
RMU events and
happenings.
>>
Information
Networks:
RMU
Birthday:
January 26, 1921
Friends
Reconnect with
old friends.
>>
Network,
network, network!
>>
Win cool RMU
prizes weekly.
937 Friends
>>
View photo
galleries of
Dawn
Douglascampus.
>>
Amy Joy
Derda
Smoot
Watch
engaging videos.
>>
Aubrey
Divito
Remain an
Jonathan
activeKyle
member of
Potts the RMU
Fisherfamily!
Mark
Houser
Valentine
J. Brkich
>>
Carla Swank can’t wait to meet up with u at the alumni
bash next month
Thu at 11:43 am
Mitch Kramer Thanks for reminding me – See you there!
Thu at 11:47 am
Robert Morris Will Warner do the chicken dance again?
Thu at 11:54 am
Robert posted a link to RMU Parents & Families’ Wall.
Robert and Aubrey DiVito are now friends.
Scott Golmic joined the group Class of 2009.
RECENT ACTIVITY
Robert Morris wonders when he will get paid back for
loaning the Continental Army all that dough....
Wed at 4:57 pm
George Washington likes this.
Thomas Paine Is this the winter of your discontent?
Wed at 5:14 pm
Kelly Burke where is trivia at?!?!
PAUL MAVRINAC M’04 will serve
as recording secretary of the
Allegheny Tax Society. Paul is
a senior manager at McCrory
& McDowell in Pittsburgh.
LARRY E. TANNER M’04 is a senior
accountant for tax services
with Beard Miller Co. He is
also treasurer for the Pittsburgh
Urban Magnet Project.
RAY BUTTER ’05 and his wife,
Beth, are the proud parents of
Max Joseph, born August 6, and
his big brother, Logan. Ray is
head equipment manager for the
RMU athletic department. The
Butters live in Aliquippa.
KELLY DOMENICK M’06 was
promoted to senior management
at Carbis Walker LLP.
DANA HACKLEY M’06 and her
husband, Grant, are the proud
parents of Cole Patterson, born
on August 6.
ROCHELLE E. OAKS D’06 is
president and CEO of The
Oaks Group LLC. She presented
The Power of Your Personality
workshops at the Blacks In
Government National Training
Conference in Baltimore in
August and at the Western
Pennsylvania Diversity Initiative
Conference in Pittsburgh in
October. Rochelle is a native
of Pittsburgh.
DIANA REPACK ’85, M’00, D’06
and her husband, Bill Repack,
recently achieved the level of
black belt in tang soo do, a
Korean martial art. The couple
spent four years, and more than
2,000 hours of practice, to earn
the honor. They live in Moon
Township.
AMANDA KVORTEK ’06 married
Brett Williams on June 27 in their
hometown of Bentleyville. They
now live in River Edge, N.J.
SHERIAN FOUST M’07 was
promoted to business
development director with
ThoughtDrivers, a business
consulting firm in the trucking
industry. She now oversees the
company’s driver leasing service.
Sherian lives in Beaver Falls.
LLOYD GIBSON D’07 and REGINA
GIBSON D’08 were presenters at
the International Council for
Small Business World Conference
in Seoul, Korea, in June. They
presented two papers, “Chinese
American Internet Banking
Acceptance: Implications for
Multicultural Marketing” and
“Online Mentoring Acceptance by
Women Entrepreneurs.” Lloyd is
the director of the MBA program
at Seton Hill University and
assistant professor of business.
The Gibsons live in Pittsburgh.
CHRISTIE L. NINEHOUSER ’07
joined Burns & Scala Real Estate
Services as senior financial
support associate. Christie
lives in Allison Park.
LOGAN BITTLE ’08 signed with the
Bloomington Prairie Thunder of
the Central Hockey League in
July. Bittle lives in Peoria, Ill.
RYAN GOTTRON ’08 is assistant
controller with Vision Financial
Group Inc. He lives in Baden.
CHAD SNYDER ’08 is a project
manager with Smith Brothers
Agency in Pittsburgh. Chad
lives in Beaver Falls.
JILLIAN HOWLEY ’09 is assistant
coach for the Mercyhurst College
women’s lacrosse team. She is
also studying for her master’s in
organizational leadership there.
Jillian is a native of East
Northport, N.Y.
NATALIE DORAN ’09 and Robert
Eaton were married on July 11.
The Eatons live in Aliquippa.
In Memoriam
WALTER JAMES “JAMIE” LEE III
’75, of Northern Cambria, passed
away on July 26 at the age of 58.
Jamie was the former executive
vice president of W.S. Lee and
Sons Inc. and was actively
involved in Boy Scouts programs.
ROBERT C. COGDELL SR. '76 of
Penn Hills passed away on
August 4, 2009 at the age of 69.
Tue at 11:00 am
Robert Morris it will be up very shortly... you already
won a free tshirt anyway!
Tue at 11:02 am
Greg Dell’Omo is loving the winter scenery on campus!
Mitch
Kramer
Mon at 3:29 pm via Facebook Mobile
3 0 • R M U . E D U / F O U N D AT I O N S
MATTHEW J. HUSAK M’04 is vice
president and audit/compliance/
risk director with Parkvale
Bank in Pittsburgh.
>
3175-14_FoundW09.qxd:Layout 1
> Road Trip to State College
The Office of Alumni Relations and other friendly faces went
road-tripping in November for a big game against the Penn State
Nittany Lions. While the team may not have prevailed, we had a
blast catching up with our central Pennsylvania alumni at a
pregame reception at Damon's before going together to the
Bryce Jordan Center in University Park.
WOULD YOUR ALUMNI GROUP LIKE TO HOST THE NEXT ROAD TRIP?
CALL (412) 397-2586 AND LET'S SET SOMETHING UP!
R O B E R T M O R R I S U N I V E R S I T Y F O U N D AT I O N S • 3 1
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IO O,
10:46 AM
Page 36
WITH
SHARI PAYNE
SHARI PAYNE M’00 can help you get engaged. And
we’re not talking about diamond rings.
This past fall, Payne was named as RMU’s first dean
of engaged learning. In this position, she oversees the
university’s Student Engagement Transcript, which
formally documents students’ participation in experiential
learning: leadership activities, community service, study
abroad, athletics, and work experience. She also coordinates
service-learning opportunities for students in conjunction
with RMU’s Office of Student and Civic Engagement.
Payne, who grew up in Vandergrift, earned a doctor
of education degree from the University of Pittsburgh,
where she also earned a bachelor’s degree in English
writing. In 2000, she earned a master’s degree in
communications and information systems from RMU.
1 | WHY DO YOU THINK EXPERIENTIAL LEARNING IS SO
IMPORTANT? It helps students bridge the gap between
theory and practice. Theories and concepts become so
much clearer when students can roll up their sleeves
and put their knowledge to work.
2 | WHAT DID YOU LIKE BEST ABOUT RMU’S
COMMUNICATIONS AND INFORMATION SYSTEMS
PROGRAM? I really enjoyed the Case Analysis class
taught by Barbara Levine, Ph.D., dean of the School of
Communications and Information Sciences. The course
focused on problem-solving in real-life situations. I
enjoyed it so much that it made me realize I wanted
to move on to a doctoral program.
3 | I HEAR YOU PLAY THE FLUTE. DID YOU EVER
CONSIDER BECOMING A PROFESSIONAL FLAUTIST? There
was a brief period of time when I was in high school that
I toyed with the idea of becoming a professional musician.
It wasn't unusual for me to practice several hours a night.
But I realized that it wouldn't be as much fun if it I had
to make a living doing it.
4 | IF YOU COULD BE ON ANY REALITY TELEVISION
SHOW, WHICH ONE WOULD IT BE AND WHY? Let's see.
I would probably want to be on a show where the central
theme was some kind of competition. I guess it would be
“Dancing With The Stars.” It just looks like so much fun!
5 | WHAT DO STUDENTS TELL YOU WHEN THEY FIRST
BECOME INVOLVED IN SERVICE LEARNING? That their
service learning courses are a lot more work than their
other courses. They also say that they’re a lot more
rewarding, too.
32 • RMU.EDU/FOUNDATIONS
6 | HOW HAVE YOU SEEN STUDENTS CHANGED BY THE TYPE
OF ENGAGED LEARNING OFFERED AT RMU? Students come
out with more self-confidence and drive. It’s really heartening
to see students who've just finished an engaged learning
experience come back for more.
7 | HOW HAVE STUDENTS CHANGED THE LIVES OF OTHERS
THROUGH THESE SAME ACTIVITIES? Our students are out
Upcoming Events
>
there in the community serving as mentors and tutors to local
elementary, middle, and high school students. They are really
serving as leaders, not just in the RMU community but in the
surrounding communities as well.
8 | WHEN YOU SPENT A FEW MONTHS AS A NEWSPAPER
REPORTER AFTER FIRST GRADUATING FROM COLLEGE,
WHAT WAS YOUR STRANGEST ASSIGNMENT? Covering a local
school board meeting was really an eye-opening experience.
Prior to that, I had no exposure to the inner workings
of our public school system. For those readers who
have never attended a school board meeting, I
highly recommend doing so at some point in time.
9 | YOUR FAVORITE BOOK IS THE TIME
TRAVELER’S WIFE. IF YOU COULD TRAVEL
TO ANY TIME IN HISTORY, WHEN
WOULD IT BE? I guess if I had that
power, it might be nice to go back
to a time when my maternal
grandparents were still alive and
young. We used to all gather around
the piano, which my mom played, and
sing show tunes and Christmas songs. My
Pap-Pap would lead the songs, while my
Grandma would just sit back and
watch because she couldn't
carry a tune.
10 | YOU SAY THAT
WHEN YOU RETIRE,
YOU WANT TO OPEN UP
A MOM-AND-POP ICE
CREAM STAND. IF RMU
WAS A FLAVOR OF ICE
CREAM, WHAT WOULD IT BE?
RMU would be like chocolate chip
cookie dough. It’s a newer flavor that
hasn't been around as long as vanilla
and chocolate, but it's a fan
favorite nonetheless.
WRITTEN BY VALENTINE J. BRKICH
13 Pittsburgh Speakers
Series: Robert Reich
Heinz Hall, 8 p.m.
26 Diversity Speakers
Series: Dr. Nangali Srinivasa
Rogal Chapel, Noon
>
24 Colonial Theatre presents
JANUARY
FEBRUARY
5/6 Winter Blast
10 Pittsburgh Speakers
Series: Mia Farrow
Heinz Hall, 8 p.m.
>
>
MARCH
Series: David Brooks
Heinz Hall, 8 p.m.
28 Pittsburgh Speakers
9 Alumni Networking
Luncheon Downtown
(location TBD)
24 Colonial Theatre presents
"Of Mice and Men" through
March 28
Massey Hall, 8 p.m.
25 Alumni Association
Open Meeting on campus
APRIL
7 Pittsburgh Speakers
"Urinetown" through Feb. 28
Massey Hall, 8 p.m.
SAVE THE DATE!
Series: Greg Mortenson
Heinz Hall, 8 p.m.
>
MAY
7/8 Commencement and
Golden Graduates
Recogonition
HOMECOMING
2010
SATURDAY,
OCTOBER 16
FOR MORE INFORMATION on these and other upcoming events, contact the Office of Alumni Relations at (412) 397-2586 or [email protected].
alumniNEWS
3175-14_FoundW09.qxd:Layout 1
NAME __________________________________________________________________ YEAR OF GRADUATION __________________
PREVIOUS/ MAIDEN NAME ______________________________________________________________________________________
ADDRESS ____________________________________________________________________________________________________
CITY/STATE/ZIP ________________________________________________________________________________________________
HOME PHONE __________________________________________ WORK PHONE __________________________________________
E-MAIL ADDRESS ______________________________________________________________________________________________
PROFESSION/POSITION __________________________________________________________________________________________
EMPLOYER NAME ______________________________________________________________________________________________
ADDRESS ____________________________________________________________________________________________________
CITY/STATE/ZIP ________________________________________________________________________________________________
SPOUSE’S NAME ______________________________________________________________________________________________
CHILDREN’S NAMES AND AGES __________________________________________________________________________________
NEWS ITEM __________________________________________________________________________________________________
____________________________________________________________________________________________________________
____________________________________________________________________________________________________________
MAIL THIS COMPLETED FORM TO: Office of Alumni Relations, Robert Morris University, 6001 University Boulevard,
Moon Township, PA 15108-1189. Or, send your news via e-mail [email protected] or fax (412) 397-2142.
R O B E R T M O R R I S U N I V E R S I T Y F O U N D AT I O N S • 3 3

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